Suspended Van Dijk leaves gaping hole in Liverpool defence for Bayern visit

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LIVERPOOL, Feb 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Fortress Anfield has become even more
impenetrable for visiting sides in the 13 months since Liverpool made Virgil
van Dijk the world’s most expensive defender, but the commanding Dutchman’s
absence for Bayern Munich’s visit in the Champions League leaves Jurgen Klopp
with a selection headache.

Van Dijk is banned for the last 16, first leg on Tuesday after being
booked three times as last season’s finalists squeezed through the group
stages by the narrowest of margins thanks to more goals scored than Napoli.

In stark contrast to their Premier League form, where Liverpool have been
beaten just once all season, Klopp’s men lost all three of their group games
on the road against Napoli, Paris Saint-Germain and Red Star Belgrade to
underline the importance of taking a lead to Germany for the second leg.

Three wins at Anfield pulled them through to the last 16 and Van Dijk has
yet to taste defeat in 25 Premier and Champions League games on home soil as
a Liverpool player, keeping 16 clean sheets in the process to tighten up a
leaky defence that undermined Klopp’s first two years in charge.

“Straightaway he was organising the defence, he was the leader at the
back, and as time has gone on he is even more important,” said former
Liverpool captain Sami Hyypia.

“He gives confidence to the players and makes many other players play
better.

“It is very difficult to find a weakness. He is an ultimate centre-back.”

Missing the o75 million man is a big enough blow, but Liverpool will also
be without Joe Gomez and most likely Dejan Lovren through injury.

Gomez underwent surgery on a lower leg fracture earlier this month, while
Lovren has not featured since suffering a hamstring injury on January 7 and
did not travel with the rest of the squad for a warm weather training camp in
Marbella this week.

– Lewandowski threat –

A makeshift centre-back pairing of Joel Matip and Fabinho are therefore
likely to be tasked with stopping another former pupil of Klopp’s — Robert
Lewandowski.

The prolific Pole won two Bundesliga titles under Klopp when the pair were
together at Borussia Dortmund and also lost the Champions League final
against Bayern in 2013 before Lewandowski was lured to Bavaria a year later.

Bayern have been dominant in the Bundesliga since Klopp’s Dortmund won
back-to-back titles in 2011 and 2012, but are playing catch up in the title
race to Lucien Favre’s outfit this season.

“Of course over the years I have watched a lot of Bayern games and this
season as well,” said Klopp.

“They were six times in a row champions of Germany, which is not easy, and
they were one of the teams in the last 10 years who were pretty much all the
time in the quarter-finals, semi-finals, final of the Champions League.”

However, while Lewandowski, the in-form Kingsley Coman and the creativity
of James Rodriguez and Leon Goretzka could post plenty problems for
Liverpool’s undermanned defence, it is at the other end Bayern could also be
exposed.

Ajax’s youngsters exposed Bayern’s weakness against pace in the Champions
League group stages, while Bayer Leverkusen and Augsburg have also given
Klopp extra encouragement in recent weeks in the Bundesliga.

As Van Dijk kept the back door shut, Mohamed Salah, Roberto Firmino and
Sadio Mane fired Liverpool to the Champions League final last season.

Without their talismanic defender, all three will need to shine more than
ever to give Klopp’s men a lead to defend when Van Dijk returns for the
second leg on March 13.